New York’s first-ever deputy mayor for financial justice says her job is to develop the economic system by delivering on Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s agenda for serving to those that want it probably the most.
In: Inexpensive housing, free childcare and city-owned grocery shops.
Out: Billions in tax breaks and incentives to large builders and employers, until they enhance the lives of working class New Yorkers.
In a pointy U-turn from insurance policies pursued by mayors for many years, Deputy Mayor Julie Su says priorities that embrace constructing 200,000 new residences and establishing common baby care will create a wholesome economic system.
Gone, she says, are the times when metropolis taxpayers helped fund new workplace developments that typically confirmed little public profit.
“Constructing housing on the scale that we’re speaking about is a job creator and an financial engine,” Su mentioned in a large ranging interview with THE CITY. “Childcare is each an financial generator as a result of while you develop that trade, there’s jobs in that trade and also you permit different individuals to affix the office.”
The turnabout is obvious from the Mamdani administration’s new method to tax breaks, favoring them solely after harder scrutiny and with provisions for union labor. Su mentioned taxpayer-funded incentives would require “advantages for working class communities,” although she wasn’t extra particular on what which may imply.

Mamdani’s agenda is hemmed in by a $5.4 billion finances deficit and Gov. Kathy Hochul’s refusal to go together with his calls for for greater taxes on the rich and firms and inflation in New York Metropolis outpaces the nationwide charge.
Talking at Metropolis Corridor, Su — a former prime official in President Joe Biden’s Labor Division — emphasised the necessity for fairness in financial development.
“It is a little little bit of a crude metaphor, however I give it some thought as we would like all people to have an actual slice of the pie,” she mentioned. “We additionally wish to develop the general pie, and we wish to make it possible for the pie is crammed with good elements that make individuals wholesome and blissful.”
That features presumably implementing the mayor’s marketing campaign pledge to almost double the minimal wage from its present $17 an hour to $30 over the subsequent a number of years.
Not on the agenda thus far are the type of direct metropolis investments in industries and neighborhoods which have spurred development previously.
Within the early 2000s, the Bloomberg administration financed the growth of the 7 subway to the far west facet, offered tax breaks to jumpstart the workplace and luxurious residential district at Hudson Yards, and overhauled the administration of the Brooklyn Navy Yard to create a house for mild manufacturing.

Mayor Invoice de Blasio provided $5 billion in tax breaks in a failed effort to convey Amazon’s second headquarters to town and pursued development outdoors Manhattan with investments and tax incentives.
Eric Adams pursued initiatives like turning the Brooklyn Military Terminal into a middle for local weather innovation firms, offered tens of millions of {dollars} to assist increase town’s movie studios and relentlessly labored to lure tech firms and universities.
“We imagine that every one instruments must be on the desk to draw and retain high-quality, family-supporting jobs in New York Metropolis,” Su mentioned. “Previously, tax incentives have enriched these on the prime of the financial ladder whereas depriving town of important income and sometimes failing to yield tangible advantages for working New Yorkers.”
Of a deliberate Hudson Yards growth that relied on one other $2 billion in public cash, a Mamdani spokesperson mentioned: “We’re not actively engaged in negotiations to maneuver this mission ahead right now.”

A key indication of Mamdani’s financial coverage could also be who is called to run the Financial Growth Corp., a semi-independent company that has traditionally been the spearhead for growth efforts.
Shortly after being appointed, Su wrote a memo that known as for the company to deal with “the standard (not simply quantity) of jobs created for the individuals who name N.Y.C. residence,” The New York Occasions reported, elevating alarm amongst enterprise leaders. Su declined to say the place she stood on filling the job however added that EDC is “firing on all cylinders.”
Enterprise leaders are intently watching who shall be appointed.
“Of us are nonetheless ready to see who the administration’s level particular person on enterprise recruitment and job retention shall be,” mentioned James Whelan, the president of the Actual Property Board of New York who labored on financial growth within the Bloomberg administration. “If you’d like a progressive metropolis, you want a affluent metropolis. Somebody must pay for the progressivity.”
Ruffled Hedge Fund Feathers
Su, who served as California’s labor secretary earlier than becoming a member of the Biden administration, moved to deal with a rising storm over the mayor’s calling out of billionaire hedge fund CEO Ken Griffin by filming a social media put up touting the pied-a-terre tax proposal in entrance of Griffin’s $238 million Manhattan penthouse.
Griffin’s fund, Citadel, moved tons of of individuals to New York from Chicago and is within the means of constructing a brand new headquarters on Park Avenue — however a letter to staff final Thursday mentioned it won’t transfer forward with the plan.

“We’re about to begin the redevelopment of 350 Park Avenue, creating 6,000 extremely paid development jobs and supporting the creation of greater than 15,000 everlasting jobs in mid-town New York,” wrote chief working officer Gerald Beeson. “The mission — if we transfer ahead — will entail greater than $6 billion {dollars} of spending.”
Gov. Hochul introduced Tuesday she would meet with Griffin amid persevering with media deal with the problem. Su tried to calm the waters in her interview with THE CITY.
“We worth Wall Road. We worth firms which have made New York Metropolis their residence,” she mentioned. “We worth the job creators who’re actually basic to creating the type of development that’s required for shared prosperity. And we completely welcome the alternatives to work with them to ship on an economic system that works for everyone.”
Su declined to say whether or not the Administration would assist a invoice within the Metropolis Council to boost the minimal wage, noting uncertainty over whether or not town had the ability to try this with out approval from state legislators.
However she strongly supported the efforts to finish what the administration sees as company gouging of customers — particularly on-line. Mamdani has required firms providing on-line subscriptions present a straightforward unsubscribe choice, and moved to drive resorts to reveal charges extra clearly.
A few of Mamdani appointees labored for Lina Khan, Biden’s Federal Commerce Fee chair, who pursued aggressive regulation of tech firms. Khan has emerged as an essential adviser to the mayor, and with the Trump Administration undoing a lot of their work in Washington, they’re making an attempt to reestablish rules on town stage.
“If you happen to as an organization function in New York Metropolis and your practices, together with subscription traps, affect New Yorkers, then we’re charged with defending New York staff and customers,” Su mentioned. “And we’re going to train our full authority on that entrance.”

The mayor has taken two steps to assist small companies within the metropolis. In January he ordered all metropolis companies to evaluate rules affecting small corporations that could possibly be decreased or eradicated. He additionally appointed small enterprise growth government Delia Awusi as his “Mother-and-Pop Czar” to assist the smallest of these firms.
Mamdani is much from the primary mayor to vow adjustments.
“I’ve been round for 4 mayors and all of them promised to cut back fines and costs and didn’t,” mentioned a skeptical Laura Rothrock, president of the Lengthy Island Metropolis Partnership.
Su says that the companies have submitted their record of rules that could possibly be revised and it’s underneath evaluate. She mentioned she understands the failures which have preceded her however added that this administration shall be totally different — and never simply by serving to small companies.
“I’ve been getting recommendation that we must always tinker on the margins slightly than set broad targets that persons are going to level at, that you simply failed at,” she mentioned. “That’s not who we’re. That’s not who this mayor is. We’ve got to show that authorities can ship.”

